Fr. 256.00
Bonnie J. (Professor Stevens, Gareth Hathway, Bonnie J. Stevens, Stevens Bonnie J., William T. Zempsky, Zempsky William T.
Oxford Textbook of Pediatric Pain
Englisch · Fester Einband
Versand in der Regel in 1 bis 3 Wochen (kurzfristig nicht lieferbar)
Beschreibung
The Oxford Textbook of Paediatric Pain brings together clinicians, educators, trainees and researchers to provide an authoritative resource on all aspects of pain in infants, children and youth.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Section 1: Introduction
- 1: Patrick J. McGrath and Bonnie J. Stevens: History of pain in children
- 2: William T. Zempsky: Prevalence of acute and chronic pain in children
- 3: Orla Moriarty and Suellen M. Walker: Long-term effects of early pain: animal models
- 4: Ruth E. Grunau, Jillian Vinall , and Cecil M.Y. Chau: The long term effects of pain in children
- 5: Joel Katz, Brittany N. Rosenbloom, Gabrielle Pagé, and Anna Huguet: Prevention of the development and maintenance of paediatric chronic pain and disability
- Section 2: Biological basis of paediatric pain
- 6: Mark L. Baccei, Gareth Hathaway, and Charles M. Greenspon: Nociceptive signalling in the periphery and spinal cord
- 7: Simon Beggs: Neuroimmune interactions and pain during postnatal development
- 8: Maria Fitzgerald: Central nociceptive pathways and descending modulation
- 9: Jeff S. Mogil: Genetics and pain in childhood
- Section 3: Social and psychological basis of paediatric pain
- 10: Liesbet Goubert, Rebecca Pillai Riddell, Laura Simons, and David Borsook: Theoretical basis of pain
- 11: Margot Latimer: Culture
- 12: Christine T. Chambers, Kristen S. Higgins, Kathryn A. Birnie, and Katelynn E. Boerner: Families and pain
- 13: Pain, social relationships, and school
- 14: Katelynn E. Boerner and Edmund Keogh: The effects of sex and gender on child and adolescent pain
- 15: Maria Pavlova, Melanie Noel, Jillian Vinall , and Patritck J. McGrath: Pain and mental health
- 16: Rocío de la Vega, Joanne Dudeney, and Tonya M. Palermo: Sleep and pain in children and adolescents
- Section 4: Pain in specific populations and diseases
- 17: Andrina MacDonald, Kristie Bennett, Jean Stansbury, Chantel C. Barney, John Belew, Scott Schwantes, Abraham J. Valkenburg, and Frank J. Symons: Pain in children with intellectual or developmental disabilities
- 18: Steve Wesiman: Paediatric cancer pain
- 19: Greta M. Palmer and Franz E. Babl: Pain management in major paediatric trauma and burns
- 20: Anna Taddio: Needle procedures
- 21: Joseph P. Cravero and Daniel S. Tsze: Procedural sedation
- 22: Madeleine Verriotis and Suellen M. Walker: Neuropathic pain in children
- 23: Laura Schanberg and Peter Chira: Inflammatory arthritis and arthropathy
- 24: Neil L. Schechter: Chronic pain syndromes in childhood: one trunk, many branches
- 25: Jacqui Clinch: Non-inflammatory musculoskeletal pain
- 26: Carlton Dampier and Soumitri Sil: Pain in sickle cell disease
- 27: R.Mark Beattie and Akshay Batra: Pain and gastroenterological diseases
- 28: Glyn Williams and Richard Howard: Postoperative pain management
- 29: Stefan Friedrichsdorf: Pain in palliative care
- 30: Jennifer Verrill Schurman, Amanda Drews Deacy, and Craig A. Friesen: Recurrent abdominal pain
- 31: Susan L. Sager and Marc Laufer: Chronic pelvic pain in children and adolescents
- 32: Andrew D. Hershey: Headaches
- 33: John Collins and Martha Mherekumombe: Persisting pain in childhood medical illness
- 34: F. Ralph Berberich and Neil L. Schechter: Common pain problems in the outpatient setting
- 35: Robert M. (Bo) Kennedy: Effective management of children s pain and anxiety in the emergency department
- Section 5: Measurement of pain
- 36: Mariana Bueno , Mats Eriksson, and Bonnie J. Stevens: Neonatal and infant pain assessment
- 37: Carl L. von Baeyer and Mark Connelly: Self-report: the primary source in assessment after infancy
- 38: Jill M. Chorney and C. Meghan McMurtry: Behavioural measures of pain
- 39: Tim Oberlander, Susanne Brummelte, Naama Rotem-Kohavi, and Kenneth D. Craig: Physiological measurement
- 40: Rebeccah Slater and Caroline Hartley: Brain responses Neurophysiological evaluation of nociceptive responses in neonates
- 41: Tonya M. Palermo, See Wan Tham , Anna C. Wilson, and Lexa K. Murphy: Measurement of health-related quality of life and physical function
- Section 6: Pharmacological interventions
- 42: Karel Allegaert, Sinno H. P. Simons, and Dick Tibboel: Principles of pain pharmacology in paediatrics
- 43: Brian Anderson: The non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and acetaminophen
- 44: Gareth Hathway: Developmental pharmacology of opioids
- 45: Howard Meng, Scott A. Strassels, and Fiona Campbell: Opioids in clinical practice
- 46: Navil F. Sethna, Walid Alrayashi, Pradeep Dinakar, and Karen R. Boretsky: Interventional pain management techniques for chronic pain
- 47: William T. Zempsky: Topical anaesthetics and analgesics
- 48: Sachin Rastogi and Fional Campbell: Drugs for neuropathic pain
- 49: Denise Harrison, Janet Yamada, and Mariana Bueno: Sucrose and sweet taste
- 50: Mark Ware, Pablo Ingelmo, and Rebecca Pitt: Cannabis
- Section 7: Psychosocial interventions
- 51: Kristen Uhl, Laura A. Wright, Rachael M. Coakley , and Deirdre E. Logan: Psychosocial interventions
- 52: Lindsey L. Cohen, Laura A. Wright, Sarah R. Martin, Sharon Shih, and Matthew Donati: Procedural pain distraction
- Section 8: Physical interventions
- 53: Susan M. Tupper, Joyce M. Engel, Mary Swiggum, and Liisa Holsti: Occupational and physical therapy for pain in pediatric clients
- 54: Marsha Campbell-Yeo, Celeste Johnston, Britney Benoit, and Brianna Richardson: Mother care for procedural pain in infants
- Section 9: Special topics
- 55: Joy A. Weydert: Complementary drugs herbs, vitamins, and dietary supplements for pain and symptom management
- 56: Lonny K. Zeltzer and Sarah R. Martin: Complementary therapy in paediatric pain
- 57: Janet Yamada, Alison M. Hutchinson, and Shelly-Anne Li: Theory-informed approaches to translating pain evidence into practice
- 58: Christine T. Chambers, Melanie Barwick, and Perri Tutelman: Knowledge translation strategies for mobilizing Individuals
- 59: Stefan Friedrichsdorf, Alison Twycross, and Bonnie J. Stevens: Knowledge translations strategies for mobilizing organization
- 60: Lindsay A. Jibb and Jennifer N. Stinson: New information and communication technologies for pain
- 61: Kenneth D. Craig and Adam Shriver: The ethics of pain control in infants and children
- 62: Anna Huguet and Miriam O. Ezenwa: Sociodemographic disparities in paediatric pain management: relationships and predictors
Über den Autor / die Autorin
Bonnie Stevens is a Professor at the Lawrence S. Bloomberg Faculty of Nursing and Faculties of Medicine and Dentistry at the University of Toronto. She is the Associate Chief of Nursing Research and a Senior Scientist in the Child Health Evaluative Sciences program at The Hospital for Sick Children. Dr Stevens is the Chair of the Certification Committee for ChildKind International. Dr Stevens focuses her research on the assessment and management of pain in hospitalized preterm newborn infants, and the effectiveness of knowledge translation (KT) strategies for changing clinical outcomes.
Gareth Hathway is a neuroscientist studying how pain in early life shapes experiences throughout the life course. He studied for a BSC (Hons) in Pharmacology at The University of Cardiff before studying for a PhD at The University of Cambridge. His post-doctoral work was carried out at UCL where he began to develop his interest in the maturation of endogenous pain control systems. Since 2009, he has led his own laboratory at The University of Nottingham continuing his work in early life pain physiology. As well as being an active researcher, he teaches on undergraduate programs in Neuroscience and Medicine and is the Course Director of Neuroscience BSc (Hons) and MSci (Hons) programs.
Dr Zempsky is Endowed Chair for Pain and Palliative Medicine at Connecticut Children's Medical Center, and a Professor of Pediatrics at the University of Connecticut School of Medicine. His division was designated a Center of Clinical Excellence by the American Pain Society in 2014, and is one of the first programs to receive the ChildKind certification focused on improving pain management for all children. Dr Zempsky was elected as Chair of the Pediatric Special Interest Group of the American Pain Society in 2015. He was appointed as the pediatric representative to the Physicians Medical Marijuana Board for the State of Connecticut in 2016. In 2017 he received the M1 mentoring grant from the University of Connecticut.
Zusammenfassung
The Oxford Textbook of Paediatric Pain brings together clinicians, educators, trainees and researchers to provide an authoritative resource on all aspects of pain in infants, children and youth.
Produktdetails
Autoren | Bonnie J. (Professor Stevens |
Mitarbeit | Gareth Hathway (Herausgeber), Bonnie J. Stevens (Herausgeber), Stevens Bonnie J. (Herausgeber), William T. Zempsky (Herausgeber), Zempsky William T. (Herausgeber) |
Verlag | Oxford University Press |
Sprache | Englisch |
Produktform | Fester Einband |
Erschienen | 29.06.2021 |
EAN | 9780198818762 |
ISBN | 978-0-19-881876-2 |
Seiten | 712 |
Serie |
Oxford Textbook |
Themen |
Naturwissenschaften, Medizin, Informatik, Technik
> Medizin
> Nichtklinische Fächer
MEDICAL / Pediatrics, MEDICAL / Nursing / Pediatric & Neonatal, Pain & pain management, Pain and pain management, Paediatric medicine, MEDICAL / Pain Management, Paediatric nursing |
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